OPINION
Scott A. Ferguson appeals the sentence imposed by the district court after he entered a plea of no contest to charges that he transported a stolen motor vehicle in interstate commerce and later sold the vehicle after it had crossed state lines. The district court calculated the Sentencing Guidelines range to be 0 to 6 months, but actually sentenced Ferguson to 12 months in prison, followed by 3 years of supervised release. It also ordered him to pay $29,000 in restitution.
Ferguson argues on appeal that the district court erred by (1) basing his sentence on judicially found facts, (2) improperly considering his socio-economic status in determining an appropriate sentence, (3) failing to consider and discuss all of the *662 factors listed in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a), and (4) imposing a sentence that was twice as long as the high end of the Sentencing Guidelines range. We reject each of these challenges, and AFFIRM the sentence imposed by the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual background
Ferguson began his employment at the United States Air Force Museum (now called the National Museum of the United States Air Force) in June of 1988. He became the Registrar in 1992 and the Chief of Collections in 1995. In the latter post, Ferguson assumed responsibility for the process of acquiring, storing, and disposing of historic property and artifacts. Under this process, items acquired by the museum are assigned “accession” numbers, and items removed from the museum’s collection are assigned “deaccession” numbers. Audits revealed, however, that the system of assigning accession and de-accession numbers was not always followed during Ferguson’s tenure as Chief of Collections.
After historic engine molds requested by a private collector turned up missing, the Air Force Office of Special Investigations launched an inquiry into World War I and World War II era items that Ferguson had deaccessioned. Investigators learned in the course of these inquiries that a two-door Cadillac Gage “Peacekeeper” armored vehicle was missing. The Peacekeeper, a pickup truck covered with armor and mounted with a machine gun, was at one time used to guard missile silos. See The Peacekeepers Have Arrived!, http://www.nps.gov/mimi/pphtml/newsde-tail6424.html (last visited July 24, 2006). Ferguson first saw the Peacekeeper on a visit to an Air Force Base in Plattsburg, New York in August of 1994. He then lobbied for the vehicle to be transferred to the Air Force Museum in Ohio.
In the summer of 1996, Ferguson prepared a series of fraudulent documents that purportedly removed the Peacekeeper from the museum’s books and accounted for the vehicle’s absence. The documents indicated that the Peacekeeper had been transferred to “Major Stevens” at the National Air Intelligence Center (NAIC), another organization on the Air Force Base, for use in a restricted project. Air Force officials did not discover that the vehicle was missing until March of 2001, when they learned that the NAIC had not requested the Peacekeeper and that no official named Major Stevens had been assigned to the NAIC during the summer of 1996.
Instead of delivering the Peacekeeper to the NAIC, Ferguson had moved it to a warehouse in Middletown, Ohio that belonged to the father of his friend Alan Wise. Ferguson then applied for a title and registration for the vehicle in Ohio, providing state officials with a fake bill of sale that listed the purchase price as $400. First in 1997 and then again in 1998, Ferguson transported the Peacekeeper from Ohio to conventions hosted by the Military Preservation Association. Those conventions took place in Memphis, Tennessee and Tobyhanna, Pennsylvania, respectively. Ferguson later sold the vehicle to Alan Wise for $18,000 in June of 1999. After performing repairs and some engine work, Wise sold the Peacekeeper to the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians for $38,000 in May of 2000.
B. Procedural background
A grand jury in the Southern District of Ohio returned a two-count indictment that charged Ferguson with (1) transporting in interstate commerce a motor vehicle that he knew was stolen, in violation of 18 *663 U.S.C. § 2312; and (2) selling a motor vehicle that he knew was stolen and that had crossed state lines after the theft, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2313. After Ferguson entered a plea of no contest, the district court found him guilty on both counts. The Presentence Report (PSR) calculated the Sentencing Guidelines range at 15-21 months. Starting with a base offense level of 4, the PSR recommended that Ferguson be denied credit for acceptance of responsibility, and that sentencing enhancements be added for an abuse of a position of trust and for causing a loss of more than $20,000 but less than $40,000. Ferguson objected to various aspects of the PSR.
A series of sentencing hearings were conducted by the district court. At the first hearing, the government introduced testimony from current and former museum employees familiar with the operations of the museum and the responsibilities of its personnel. Other witnesses included an Air Force investigator and Ferguson’s friend Alan Wise. The district court also heard argument from Ferguson’s counsel regarding the effect of the Supreme Court’s then-recent decision in
United States v. Booker,
At the final sentencing hearing, counsel for Ferguson attempted to persuade the district court that “a sentence restricting the defendant’s freedom on house arrest, with or without electronic monitoring,” adequately “reflects the seriousness of the offense, it promotes respect for the law, and provides just punishment.” Counsel observed that a sentence of probation, with no jail time, was not prohibited by statute and that the Guidelines were no longer mandatory. After Ferguson addressed the court briefly, the district court began its analysis, noting at the outset that its task was “to impose a sentence sufficient, but not greater than necessary to comply with the purposes of sentencing set forth in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a).” The court then read aloud the factors listed in § 3553(a) and reiterated its understanding that, after Booker, the court was entitled to make findings of fact so long as those findings did not result in a sentence above the statutory maximum of ten years.
In explaining its sentencing decision, the district court began with the Guidelines calculation. Specifically, the court sustained Ferguson’s objection to the recommended enhancement for abuse of a position of trust.
See
U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual § 3B1.3 (1998). Such an enhancement, the court ruled, could be based
only
on the conduct for which Ferguson had been convicted, and not on other “relevant conduct” as defined by § 1B1.3 of the Guidelines. (We note in passing that the district court was wrong to sustain Ferguson’s objection on this point, since this court held in
United States v. Young,
The district court then proceeded seria-tim through most of the factors contained in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a). Of the remaining factors that it identified, the court essentially found that all but two weighed against a lengthy term of imprisonment. The court noted that the crimes of conviction were nonviolent, that Ferguson posed *664 no threat to public safety, and that the ordeal of conviction had already rehabilitated Ferguson. Nor, in the court’s view, would any sentence imposed create an unwarranted disparity among federal defendants because no other person had been convicted of the offenses in question under similar circumstances.
Cutting in the other direction, however, were the § 3553(a) provisions instructing courts to impose a sentence that promotes respect for the law and that provides adequate deterrence. The district court explained that Ferguson had taken advantage of his position at the museum to acquire a vehicle that “while not on everyone’s wish list, is a national treasure.” “A sentence imposed on this defendant,” the court continued, “who has achieved much in his profession, will ... have a serious deterrent effect on others similarly situated who might be inclined to abuse a position of trust ... to steal and dispose of an item that is, for better or worse, irreplaceable.” The court then emphasized that a lenient sentence based on Ferguson’s background would not promote respect for the law because it would “simply tend to set in concrete the public perception that the higher you are, the less you have to fear from the law; and that if a person can afford it, the system, such as it is, can be beaten.” On the heals of these comments, the court sentenced Ferguson to 12 months in prison and 3 years of supervised release, and ordered him to pay $29,000 in restitution. This timely appeal followed.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of review
We will not overturn a sentence imposed by a district court unless that sentence is unreasonable.
United States v. Richardson,
On the other hand, a sentence may substantively unreasonable where the district court “select[s] the sentence arbitrarily, bas[es] the sentence on impermissible factors, fail[s] to consider pertinent § 3553(a) factors, or giv[es] an unreasonable amount of weight to any pertinent factor.”
Webb,
Although sentences within the Guidelines range are afforded a presumption of reasonableness,
United States v. Williams,
B. The district court engaged in permissible judicial factfinding and did not impermissibly consider Ferguson’s socio-economic status
Two of Ferguson’s arguments— that the district court engaged in unauthorized judicial factfinding when it determined the amount of loss caused by his crimes and that it impermissibly considered his socio-economic status — can be summarily rejected. As to the first argument, this court and others have repeatedly held since
Booker
that district judges can find the facts necessary to calculate the appropriate Guidelines range using the same preponderance-of-the-evidence standard that governed prior to
Booker. See United States v. Stone,
The district court in the present case properly conducted extensive hearings and relied on the PSR to determine the facts used in calculating the Guidelines range. Under this court’s post-Booker caselaw, the district court acted within its authority in calculating the amount of loss.
Ferguson’s contention that the district court impermissibly based its sentence on his socio-economic status likewise lacks merit. He maintains that the district court’s statements during the sentencing hearing contravened the policy statement found at U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual § 5H1.10, which bars the court from using socio-economic status, along with factors like race and religion, as a basis for a sentencing determination. But as this court explained in
United States v. Holz,
Citing the Supreme Court’s decision in
Williams v. United States,
[T]he failure to consider persons similarly situated to this defendant and the deterrent effect upon them of any sentence imposed today will not promote respect for the law. It will simply tend to set in concrete the public perception that the higher you are, the less you have to fear from the law; and that if a person can afford it, the system, such as it is, can be beaten.
District courts are still obliged to consider the Commission’s policy statements after
Booker. See Jones,
C. Ferguson’s sentence is reasonable
The primary challenge lodged by Ferguson is that his 12-month prison sentence, which is twice the maximum of the Guidelines range calculated by the district court, is unreasonable. In considering this challenge, we note that this court recently issued its first published opinions sustaining a district court’s imposition of a post-
Booker
sentence that varied upward from the advisory Guidelines range.
See United States v. Barton,
In
Matheny,
the district court calculated an advisory Guidelines range of 24 to 30 months, but imposed a sentence of 36 months on the ground that the Guidelines range “severely” underestimated the seriousness of the defendant’s criminal history.
Similarly, the district court in the present case justified a sentence six months above the high end of the Guidelines range with specific reference to the factors enumerated in § 3553(a). The district court acknowledged that some of the statutory factors favored leniency, but ultimately concluded that two others — the need for the sentence “to promote respect for the law” and the need for the sentence “to afford adequate deterrence to criminal conduct,” § 3553(a)(2)(A), (B) — supported a sentence above the Guidelines range that the court had calculated.
With respect to these two factors, the court expressed its view that a sentence with significant jail time would “have a serious deterrent effect on others similarly situated who might be inclined to abuse a position of trust and as a result to steal and dispose of an item that is, for better or worse, irreplaceable.” This analysis also demonstrates that the district court was not thinking in the abstract, but was instead focused on the particular “nature and circumstances of the offense,” another factor enumerated in § 3553(a). Nothing in the court’s nuanced application of the § 3553(a) factors to Ferguson’s case indicates that the court gave “an unreasonable amount of weight to any pertinent factor.”
Webb,
The sentence was also procedurally reasonable. In explaining its sentencing decision, the district court presciently complied with the requirement that this court would later articulate in
Richardson
— namely, it provided reasons for rejecting Ferguson’s plea for no jail time.
See
The 12-month sentence imposed upon Ferguson, in short, was both procedurally and substantively reasonable. Although Ferguson disagrees with the manner in which the district court weighed the statutory factors, the record amply demonstrates that the court evaluated all of those factors, entertained a forceful argument for leniency, and balanced the relevant considerations in light of Congress’s command that the sentence imposed be “sufficient, but not greater than necessary, to comply with the purposes” articulated in § 3553(a)(2). Indeed, the district court twice quoted this so-called “parsimony provision,” which this court has highlighted as the guidepost for sentencing decisions
post-Booker. See Foreman,
The district court therefore did what it was obligated to do by both this court’s caselaw and the governing statute — it followed a congressional command and then “exercis[ed] independent judgment in sentencing [a] criminal defendant[ ] within statutory limits.” See id.; Douglas A. Berman, Reasoning Througk Reasonableness, 115 Yale L.J. Pocket Part 142 (2006), *668 http://www.thepocketpart.org /2006/07/ber-man.html (reading Booker as requiring “district courts to exercise independent reasoned judgment when imposing a sentence”). Under these circumstances, we cannot say that the court’s decision to impose a sentence six months above the advisory Guidelines range was unreasonable.
Finally, we return to a point mentioned briefly above. The government, as an alternative ground for affirmance, argues that Ferguson’s sentence “does not need any unusual justification” because it falls within what the Guidelines range would have been had the district court not mistakenly believed that it could not impose an enhancement for abuse of a position of trust.
See
U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual § 3B1.3 (1998);
United States v. Young,
III. CONCLUSION
For all of the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the sentence imposed by the district court.
